Stéphane Schmutz

Stéphane Schmutz

Stéphane Schmutz (1 July 1965) is a Swiss novellist and scientist who creates short stories with a structure in DNA. He introduces the codons in the literary text and searches to narrate with amino acids. To do so he constructs a structure in DNA inside the short story. The codon is placed inside the text and the anticodon is to find in the imaginary. He published three short stories in 2002 and republished them in 2004 under the pseudonym of Steve Smith in Collection deutscher Erzähler band 3 at R.G Fischer Verlag in Germany (Frankfurt am Main). Intergalactic Nightmare, Mission Alpha, an Awful Night and it exists a fourth short story called The Biological Factor (unpublished). His work demands him twenty years. He was influenced by the work of Virginia Wolf, James Watson, Jacques Monod,Carl Sagan, Jacques Ruffié and Charles Darwin.
Biography
He is born the 1.
July 1965 at the clinic Monbriant in Lime of Bottoms in Switzerland.
His father; Claude Schmutz 1935-1980) was technician and had a wealth in hauses and his mother Janine Schmutz(1935-) is a French woman and was a midwife.
Stéphane Schmutz has two sisters Régine Toupance (1966-) and Marianne Schmutz (1968-).
Stéphane Schmutz was a normal student but at the death of his father in 1980, he works harder at school until to pass a literary maturity (1989) at 3Collège Saint-Charles of Porrentruy in Switzerland in the Canton of Jura and then he goes to the university of Neuchâtel4 (1995) (Biology).